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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Preventing Childhood Obesity in Early Care and Education Programs: How to implement a new set of national standards in nutrition, physical activity, and screen time for early childhood programs National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) November 4, 2011, Orlando, FL 1
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education (NRC) Presenters Marilyn J. Krajicek, EdD, RN, FAAN Director of the National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education Danette Glassy, MD, FAAP University of Washington, Clinical Professor Mercer Island Pediatrics Sandra Cianciolo Project Coordinator for National Training Institute for Child Care Health Consultants University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 2
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education (NRC) The Consortium: American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) American Public Health Association (APHA) National Resource Center (NRC) for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education (at University of Colorado) National Training Institute (NTI) (at University of North Carolina Chapel Hill) Funded through the Maternal and Child Health Bureau Cooperative Agreement (MCHB) 3
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education (NRC) NRC Mission: To improve the quality of out-of-home child care and early education programs and support the health and safety of the children they serve. 4
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education (NRC) The NRC supports the efforts of: Child care providers Early educators Families/parents Health professionals Early childhood comprehensive systems State child care regulatory agencies State and local health departments Policy makers 5
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Caring for Our Children (CFOC) 3 rd Ed. Caring for Our Children National Health and Safety Performance Standards for Early Care and Education Programs 3 rd edition Revision completed and published in June 2011 4-year revision process 10 Technical Panels - 85 panel members - Content Experts from AAP, APHA, and subject specialists 6
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Caring for Our Children (CFOC) 3 rd Ed. Definitive source on best practice in health and safety in early care and education settings Evidence-based Expert consensus Model for health & safety practices 7
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Chapter 1: Staffing Chapter 2: Program Activities for Healthy Development Chapter 3: Health Promotion and Protection Chapter 4: Nutrition and Food Service Chapter 5: Facilities, Supplies, Equipment & Environmental Health Caring for Our Children (CFOC) 3 rd Ed. 8 Chapter 6: Play Areas/ Playgrounds & Transportation Chapter 7: Infectious Disease Chapter 8: Children With Special Health Care Needs & Disabilities Chapter 9: Administration Chapter 10: Licensing & Community Action Contents:
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Preventing Childhood Obesity in Early Care And Education Programs First spin-off from CFOC 3 rd edition Released July 2010 Available in print through American Academy of Pediatrics and online at nrckids.org Spanish version available online 9
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing CFOC Nutrition Panel had primary responsibility Expert Panel members included : Pediatricians Maternal and Child Health Professionals Nutritionists Other Health Professionals – Nursing, Social Work Breastfeeding Experts Physical Activity Experts Child Development Specialists Preventing Childhood Obesity in Early Care And Education Programs 10
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Obesity 1 in 3 low income children are obese or overweight by 5 years 11
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Health Consequences Seriously reduced quality of life Increased risk of chronic disease: – Diabetes – Hypertension and Cardiovascular disease – GE reflux disease – Obstructive sleep apnea, which can contribute to learning problems and behavior problems – Asthma Increased cost of health and medical care 12
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Obesity and Child Care Children in child care are more likely to be obese – Maher, et al, Pediatrics 2008 Aug Children in child care are sedentary for most of their time in child care (70-83%), excluding naps- Pate, et al, Pediatrics 2004 Nov – only small amount (2-3%) of time in vigorous activity – only 12-46 min of moderate or vigorous activity over course of 6 hr day in child care 13
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing CFOC Standards NUTRITION – variety of healthy foods – promote positive mealtime environment PHYSICAL ACTIVITY – daily indoor & outdoor activities SCREEN TIME – limited 14
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing How the Standards Address the Problem promote eating a variety of healthy foods advocate breastfeeding of infants emphasize and promote daily physical activity limit access to screen time partner with families to promote healthy eating practices and lifestyles encourage collaboration among families, caregivers, and community health partners 15
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Examples of New and Significant Changes In CFOC 3rd Edition Related to Childhood Obesity Caring for Our Children (CFOC) 3 rd Ed. 16
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Encourage Breastfeeding Encourage mothers to breastfeed at the child care program – provide comfortable, private areas Train caregivers/teachers to support and advocate for breastfeeding. Implement policies and procedures on handling and feeding human milk safely – reduces mother’s anxiety and promotes safety for infants 17
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Nutrition Feed infants on cue by consistent caregiver Accommodate use of soy formula and soy milk when necessary Use 2% milk for children 12 months to 2 years, for whom overweight or obesity is a concern with written documentation from health professional 18
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Accommodate vegetarian diets Serve small size portions Availability of age-appropriate nutritious snacks Caregivers are models of healthy eating habits Provider sits with children during meal time and encourages socialization Food is never used as a reward/punishment Nutrition 19
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Water available throughout the day No fruit juice for children under 12 months. 100% juice limited to 4-6 ounces for children 1– 6 years of age Whole fruits encouraged Nutrition education offered to children & parents Nutrition 20
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Physical Activity Standards 21
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Physical Activity Promote development of infant movement skills – plenty of tummy time Promote active daily play for 1-6 year olds with: – 2-3 outdoor occasions – 2 or more structured activities over course of day (indoor and/or outdoor) – Time for unstructured active play 22
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Caregivers and teachers encourage and participate in physical activities: Lead structured activities Wear clothing that permits safe and easy movement Prompt children to be active Physical Activity 23
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Limit restrictions to movement of infants Limit time in infant equipment (bouncy seats, swings, etc) and high chairs to no more than 15 minutes (except for meals & snacks) Cribs are only for sleeping or resting Restricting active play as a punishment is not allowed Physical Activity 24
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Barriers to increased physical activity Structural No outdoor playground No indoor play-space for days with inclement weather Playground too small, not enough equipment- Wide variability across different centers Teacher Gatekeeper of the playground Weather: Rain/Snow Standing water, snow on playground “Extreme” heat/ smog alert or cold – Wide variability in minimum temperature, From Copeland, et al, Arch Pediatr Adol Med, May 2011 25
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Weather “STANDARD: Children should play outdoors daily when weather and environmental conditions do not pose a significant health or safety risk: – Wind chill factor at or below minus 15 degrees F and heat index at or above 90°F, as identified by the National Weather Service.” 26
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Screen Time Standards 27
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Screen Time No TV, video, DVD and computer use under 2 years of age 2 years and older: – Only 30 minutes per week of media time and only for educational/physical activity purposes – Computer use – 15 minute increments; school age children may have longer for homework. Caregivers as role models – no TV watching during day 28
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Using the Standards National and State Campaigns can use to build integrated nutrition and physical activity components in their systems. Caregivers/teachers can use to develop and implement practices and policies and use in staff training. Families can support and join with caregivers/teachers in the implementation of healthy practices. They can also reinforce at home. 29
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Regulators can use to develop and/or improve state regulations that support the prevention of obesity and promote healthy habits. Health care professionals can assist families and providers with sound evidence-based rationale for implementing and following healthy lifestyles. Academic faculty can use standards as a resource to prepare students for entering the early childhood workplace. Using the Standards 30
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Achieving A State of Healthy Weight NRC assessed child care regulations of all States and D.C. to determine language in conformity with standards in Preventing Childhood Obesity (PCO). 31
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Achieving A State of Healthy Weight Three topic areas: Infant Feeding Nutrition Physical Activity 32
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Achieving A State of Healthy Weight Three child care types Child Care Centers Large Family Child Care Homes Small Family Child Care Homes 33
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Achieving A State of Healthy Weight Rating Methodology: Components Selected 275 PCO/CFOC components of standards derived Healthy Weight Advisory Committee rated components based on impact on obesity if implemented in child care (see Appendix C of report) Components divided into 3 content areas: Infant Feeding Nutrition Physical Activity/Screen Time Top 47 components selected for rating 34
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Achieving A State of Healthy Weight Rating Methodology (cont.) : States’ Documents Verified & Vetted Most recent regulations Obesity-pertinent content Rating Scales & Rules Established 4-point scale Tailored to each component Spreadsheets Designed to Record Ratings 118 States’ documents 3 child care types 35
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Achieving A State of Healthy Weight Rating Methodology (cont.) : Raters Trained and Reliability Tested Five 2-person teams, with 60 ratings each on same states and same components Overall average Spearman’s rho coefficients = 0.964 (p>.001) Ratings over period of 3 months 16,638 individual ratings performed Post-rating review of all ratings for consistency For states with multiple documents, a final score per component was calculated for each child care type Result = 6826 final ratings used for analysis Data Analyses The Evaluation Center of the School of Education and Human Development, University of Colorado Denver and NRC Staff 36
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Achieving A State of Healthy Weight Overall Rating Schema: Degree of conformity on a scale of 1-4 and color coded on charts. 1 = state regulation contradicts the component 2 = state regulation does not refer to the component 3 = state regulation partially meets component 4 = state regulation fully meets component 37
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Achieving A State of Healthy Weight National Exemplary State (tied with Mississippi) Delaware Strongest in Infant Feeding for all child care settings Weakest in Nutrition for Small Family Child Care 38
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing National Resources NAP SACC: The Nutrition and Physical Activity Self-Assessment for Child Care (NAP SACC) program Research-tested intervention designed to enhance policies, practices, and environments in child care by improving the: nutritional quality of food served amount and quality of physical activity staff-child interactions facility nutrition and physical activity policies and practices and related environmental characteristics Primarily addresses the inter-personal and organizational levels of the socioecologic model. 39 http://www.center-trt.org/index.cfm
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing http://healthykidshealthyfuture.org 40 Let’s Move! Child Care National Resources
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing National Resources Motion Moments Approx. 7 minutes/video Demonstrates ideas for incorporating physical activity into child care programs for infants, toddlers, and preschoolers Available at http://nrckids.org/Motion_Mome nts/index.htm http://nrckids.org/Motion_Mome nts/index.htm 41
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing National Resources Healthy Child Care America www.healthychildcare.org Resources include: Caregiver Newsletter CFOC Standard of the Month http://www.healthychildcare.org/ENewsCaregiver.html #listserv 42
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CFOC, 3 rd Edition Standard 1.6.0.1: A facility should identify and engage/partner with a CCHC who is a licensed health professional with education and experience in child and community health. 5/21/2015The National Training Institute for Child Care Health Consultants 43
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5/21/2015The National Training Institute for Child Care Health Consultants 44 What does a CCHC do? CCHCs have expert information, resources, and referrals to offer. Through onsite and telephone consultation, health education, and technical assistance, CCHCs work with child care facilities to help create environments that support the healthy development of young children.
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CCHCs and Nutrition/Physical Activity CCHCs can have a role in improving nutrition and physical activity for children in child care because they: l Already established relationships l Knowledge base l Experience with training and TA 5/21/2015The National Training Institute for Child Care Health Consultants 45
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What can a CCHC do? 1.Partner with a center to self-assess. 2. Help the center identify a plan of action. 3. Provide training on nutrition and physical activity for children, staff and parents/guardians. 4. Develop and distribute materials or incentives. 5. Provide technical assistance. 5/21/2015The National Training Institute for Child Care Health Consultants 46
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CCHCs Promote Breastfeeding Physical Activity Good Nutrition 5/21/2015The National Training Institute for Child Care Health Consultants 47
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Strategies and Interventions Let’s Move! NAP SACC I Am Moving, I Am Learning Color Me Healthy Be Active Kids 5/21/2015The National Training Institute for Child Care Health Consultants 48
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SNAPP: Supporting Nutrition and Active Physical Play Friday, November 4 th at 2:30pm Orlando Convention Center Room W311H 5/21/2015The National Training Institute for Child Care Health Consultants 49
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Policy Changes & National Initiatives Licensing Toolkit Action Sheets for potential strengthening of child care regulations and practices related to preventing childhood obesity Specific sheets for: Caregivers Legislators Licensing Agencies All NRC resources available at http://nrckids.orghttp://nrckids.org All NRC resources available at http://nrckids.orghttp://nrckids.org 50
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Policy Changes & National Initiatives Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Existing Meal Patterns: Inconsistent with new Dietary Guidelines for Americans and MyPlate Available at: http://www.fns.usda.gov/cnd/ care/ProgramBasics/Meals/Meal_Patterns.htm 51 2011 Meal Pattern Recommendations: Consistent with new Dietary Guidelines for Americans and MyPlate Pending adoption/publication
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Policy Changes & National Initiatives Race to the Top—Early Learning Challenge State-level competitive grants Under U.S. Department of Education (DOE) and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) To close the achievement gap for children with high needs and support states that best prepare their young children for success in kindergarten Five key areas of reform: 1.Successful State Systems (interagency and sustainable) 2.High-Quality, Accountable Programs (TQRIS) 3.Promoting Early Learning and Development Outcomes for Children (utilize common standards and measures) 4.Great Early Childhood Education Workforce (standardized education and professional development) 5.Measuring Outcomes and Progress (assess and inform progress) 52 http://www2.ed.gov/programs /racetothetop/index.html
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing Policy Changes & National Initiatives CDC & HHS Grant: CPPW Communities Putting Prevention to Work Funding: Intense – Proven – Sustainable - Community approaches to chronic disease prevention by: Increasing physical activity Improving nutrition Decreasing overweight/obesity Tobacco cessation Initiatives involve partnership of leaders from public health, schools, cities, counties, local businesses, and citizens. 60 communities in 33 states and 3 tribes are involved in this grant currently, 49 addressing obesity 53 http://www.cdc.gov/Com munitiesPuttingPrevention toWork/about/index.htm
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1-800-598-KIDS (5437) http://nrckids.org ©2011 National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education University of Colorado College of Nursing For more information, please contact the National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education: Website- http://nrckids.orghttp://nrckids.org Telephone - 1-800-598-5437 E-mail - info@nrckids.orginfo@nrckids.org National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education 13120 E. 19 th Ave., F541 Aurora, CO 80045 54
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